Spring management tips for your horse pasture

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Grazing horses
Horse grazing

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Along with longer, sunnier days, spring presents management challenges and opportunities on the horse farm.

Melting snow and spring rains can, at the very least, produce muddy pastures and at the very worst create dangerous flooding.

New grass growth, rich in nutrients, may be forbidden fruit for your overweight or metabolic horse.

Still, there’s no better time to evaluate and put together a farm improvement plan.

Tips to help you get off to a great start

  Keep horses off of early pastures. Snowmelt and rain can make for a very wet early spring.

Delicate early pasture growth combined with wet sod makes a slick and messy turnout for horses.

Horses should be kept off of early spring pastures until the grass reaches at least 8 inches in height and the soil can provide a dry, solid footing for hoof traffic.

A sacrifice lot supplied with hay, water and a mineral block will provide some sunshine, nutrition and exercise for your horses without destroying the long-term grazing potential of your pasture.

  Frost seed low-quality areas in your pasture. March is the month to frost seed in the northern part of the country.

If your pasture is still frozen with some snow or ice cover, consider frost seeding to improve those areas that were sparse in grass cover last summer.

Frost seeding involves overseeding pastures while the ground is still frozen and letting the thawing action of the ground draw the seeds into the soil bed.

  Improve your pasture with lime or a fertilizer application. Early spring is the perfect time to improve your pasture.

Collect a soil sample to evaluate your pasture’s nutrient needs.

If your soil is acidic or lacks essential minerals, early spring application at the correct rate of fertilizer or lime will boost your pasture’s productivity, increasing production of quality forage and decreasing weed contamination.

  Slowly introduce horses to spring pastures. Spring pastures are high in moisture and nutrients and can be a shock to your horse’s digestive system after a long winter of eating hay.

Horses should be introduced to pasture slowly over several weeks to reacquaint their digestive system with green grass.

Horses that are overweight, have foundered or have high blood insulin levels should have pasture access strictly controlled during the entire grazing season.

  Prepare for a dry summer. While many parts of the country are experiencing extreme flooding, you still need to prepare for the possibility of drought this summer.

Good spring pasture management will go a long way to prolong the grazing season.

Mowing weeds, dragging manure piles and resting pastures to prevent overgrazing during the summer months is paramount to long-term pasture productivity.

Rotational grazing may also be a great strategy to increase your horse pasture’s longevity and quality.

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